Breakfast with the Mayors

| No Comments

Mark your calendars now for Tuesday, Jan. 26, 2016, the date of the first Franklin Tomorrow Breakfast With the Mayors, presented by Pinnacle Financial Partners, in 2016.

Williamson County Mayor Rogers Anderson and Franklin Mayor Ken Moore have invited the mayors of Williamson County’s other cities to join them that day for a mayoral summit.
Reservations for the event will be accepted in early January for the event, which will be held at Rolling Hills Community Church, 1810 Columbia Ave., in Franklin. Breakfast from Puckett’s Gro. & Restaurant and Royal Cup Coffee will be served starting at 7 a.m. and guests will be able to network until the start of the program at 7:45 a.m.
Invited have been Brentwood Mayor Regina Smithson, Fairview Mayor Patti Carroll, Nolensville Mayor Jimmy Alexander, Spring Hill Mayor Rick Graham, and Thompson’s Station Mayor Corey Napier.
The remaining Breakfasts With the Mayors will be held April 26, July 26, and Oct. 25.
Additional information and sponsors for Breakfast With the Mayors will be announced in January. Sponsorships are available for the series or individual Breakfasts. For more information, contact Mindy Tate at (615) 794-0998.

Holiday Schedule Trash Pick Up

| No Comments

Check out the latest schedule from the City of Franklin.

New Years Day

Martin Luther 2016

Good Friday 2016

Memorial Day 2016

Independence 2016

Labor Day 2016

Thanksgiving 2016

 

 

 

City of Franklin Stream Restoration Project Receives State Award

| No Comments

The Engineering firm that designed and completed the work on Ralston Creek Stream Restoration received an Honor Award from the Tennessee American Society of Landscape Architects.
Civil and Environmental Consultants accepted the award at a ceremony last month in Nashville. The project was launched after the area was directly affected in the May 2010 floods. Swift flood waters caused substantial erosion resulting in the loss of stream bank, damage to wood tie retaining walls, and there was a loss of vegetation and habitat in this part of Ralston Creek. The Ralston Creek Restoration Project directly affected eight individual property owners and the overall character of the subdivisions open space/ recreation area.
The project team consisted of landscape architects, civil engineers, biologists and ecologists. The end result was a new meandering stream section allowing aquatic life to thrive in the stream as well as on the banks. The team was charged with restoration and enhancement of this section of the creek. Due to the severity of the flood the creek lost much of its meandering characteristics, being straightened and actually splitting into two sections. Much of the established vegetation was swept away leaving little left behind to stabilize the banks.
The final design created a single channel with a natural meandering stream section within the existing drainage easement on site. Single and double rock toe protection construction where used to stabilize the stream banks.